Plus how to make polluters pay, fight for a trade model that helps all Americans, new 2026 outings, how Grizzly 399's death could have been prevented, and more
The Public Lands Rule is a real treat for nature, wildlife, and our climate by making it clear that conservation is an essential use of our public lands. But as Halloween approaches, the Trump administration wants to scare away these protections and hand more of our public lands to corporate polluters.
The late-season Hurricane Melissa -- the world's strongest storm of the year -- rapidly intensified into a Category 5 and just made landfall in Jamaica, bringing violent winds up to 185 miles per hour and major risk of flash flooding.
This is one in a pattern of increasingly deadly and dangerous unnatural disasters. We need to fight back with even bolder resistance against the polluting corporations and politicians determined to sacrifice our future. Join us in taking action to fight the climate crisis below.
With a government shutdown already giving us all a fright, we can't afford trade deals that prioritize corporations over people. The Trump administration is reviewing the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA) -- and your voice can help stop a monstrous mistake.
The fossil fuel industry is more terrifying than any horror movie villain. We're teaming up with Public Citizen and the Revolving Door Project to reveal how oil and gas companies turned our government into their Polluter Playground, spending $450 million to get Trump and Republicans elected so they can continue to poison our communities and climate without consequences.
They promised cleaner trucks ... now they're backsliding faster than a witch on a broom! Four major truck manufacturers are trying to back out of their promise to build cleaner electric trucks by suing to abandon an agreement they signed in 2023 with California.
Our 2026 trips are now open for registration, offering the perfect potion of adventure, connection, and purpose. Hike, paddle, and serve in some of the most spellbinding places on Earth -- from Alaska's wild frontiers to Utah's red rock canyons.
This isn't a ghost story -- it's real. The Senate is advancing a dangerous bill called the Fix Our Forests Act, which could open the floodgates to industrial logging across millions of acres of our national forests. If we don't act quickly, wildlife, clean water, and communities will all be at risk.
One of the most famous grizzlies to ever live died nearly a year ago. While her legacy lives on in the dozens of cubs she reared, her death was a preventable one. Every year millions of animals are killed trying to traverse our concrete world.
This Halloween, help keep the magic alive above us. Sierra magazine contributor Amy White looks at ways to protect one of the most imperiled natural phenomena on Earth: regions without light.
Pennsylvania leaders are making plans for the state's first underground park: Laurel Caverns. This rare karst cave is part of a landscape that underlies 20 percent of the US and whose aquifers hold 40 percent of the nation's groundwater. Karst formations, which include caves, springs, and underground rivers, are some of the most underprotected and neglected ecosystems in the world.
We have no time to waste. We must act at unmatched speed on an unprecedented scale to confront the crises facing our country and our planet. We can only be successful by building a movement that works for everyone. Learn more about the Sierra Club.